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Missing links
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If
we link both expeditions, Heyerdahl and Blashford-Snell,
they prove that primitive balsas could transport
knowledge between South America and Africa, the
Middle East and India.
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The answer on a question like ‘why people built similar pyramids at different places in the world’ or ‘why the astrologic calendars of the Maya, the Egyptian and even the Tiwanaku looks alike’ or ‘how cocaine and tobacco arrived in Egypt’, could be given by these expeditions.
Blashford-Snell: "What left is to show the world that all knowledge came from Atlantis and later from the Tiwanaku.
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| "There
is only one little tiny problem. Blashford-Snell
has to hurry. While he dreams of an ocean passage
from South America around South Africa to Mesopotamia,
somewhere in the year 2005, two competitors are
on their way. The American adventurer John Buck
who prepares a balsa-ride from Chile to Sydney
Australia in February 2003 and the Spanish ex-commando
adventurer Kitin Munoz. |
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Kitin completed last year a balsa-trip from Sidi Ifni (Maroc) to Colombia. No one knows why, because dr. Thor Heyerdahl did that already in 1970. A lot of people think that Munoz is absent minded. Well, how to put it. That he is different. Before his Atlantic Ocean crossing he tried to reach Japan, leaving in a 30-meter balsa from Arica, Chile.
Two times he tried, two times the balsa sunk. And that because he wanted to prove that the Tiwanaku empire brought the knowledge to the ‘Bushido’ in Asia!! |
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